Well publicly is a question of where. There's still a lot of startup talk on startup focused reddits / twitter / hn. The main trend I have seen with AI tooling is the dialogue shifting to indie / small teams rather than the VC rush of the 2010s.
Just finished For Blood and Money - Nathan Vardi. Enjoyed the real world characters who drove the developments of cancer research forward and the messy business of pharma.
I enjoyed Ra - more than "There is not anti-mimetics division" which I felt lost itself in the second half.
I greatly enjoyed Anathem - though I have always been a sucker for Stephenson.
I found 2666 to be profound and tragic. Obviously the intention of the book - but given that the crime rate in my country is analogous to Mexico's - the pain of the femicide in the book and casual cover-ups felt tangible to me. I feel it is clear that is is incomplete due to the Author's death, but I don't think that takes away from the book.
In a similar vein, but in completely different genres I finally finished the wheel of time series which I started nearly 15 years ago. After getting to book 11 I pushed through the rest this year. Unfortunately I felt mostly underwhelmed. I think the Sanderson transition did not age as well as initially received. Maybe it's because I have read too much Sanderson before getting to him. His voice is noticeably different to Jordan's.
Finally I really enjoyed both the Wager and Pachinko.
I have started a slew of other books and not completed them but there are pending standouts. I am still halfway through Stalin by Monetfiore, and I enjoy returning when I can stomach the horrible history.
Honorable mention to Apple in China which I did not complete and might eventually. Don't think I will finish Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas though.
In the current growing pending pile I have 1493 - which I know I will enjoy, everything is tuberculosis and now it can be told. We shall see if I make any headway :)
I have been through a huge over supply of AI generated CVs using similar tools this year. I am sure this will help people so not bashing the tool per se, but bare in mind that you will be joining the robots.
I don't know what the solution really is, but as much as I hate it, a verified Linkedin Profile is a huge signal now. Otherwise a real personal site with care and history. I am guilty of being bad with the second so - no easy answers. Maybe even a wacky looking CV would make me notice a candidate more. Powerpoint 90s style.
The recent novel Abundance seems to be agressibley grouped with the John Green novel An Abundance of Katherines - which I think is a humorous retelling of 2025 but also maybe needs some matching work
Metly is a pre-seed startup (team of 5) building strategic intelligence for pharmaceutical companies. We're aiming to replace consultants.
Pharma companies hold critical knowledge across disconnected systems—regulatory filings, clinical pipelines, competitive intelligence—none of it linked to real market activity. We're building the layer that connects it all and makes it actionable.
You'll be working on the hard parts of getting LLMs to construct knowledge graphs users can actually trust: entity extraction from dense regulatory documents, grounding outputs with verifiable citations, and turning unstructured data into clear recommendations.
Stack: TypeScript/Python, React on TanStack, PostgreSQL, Kubernetes on GCP.
We have traction and are moving fast in 2026. Competitive salary and meaningful early-stage equity.
I don't get the hype for a specific agent here really - most cloud sdks _+ pulumi support languages like typescript and python for IaC. No YAML. I think terrform was thinking about this the last time I was working with them. That gives you all the benefits of software agents we already have available. I think for most those will be enough.
Right — and that’s exactly what people said about shell scripts before IaC, and about IaC before SDK-based infra. Each wave solves a pain point, then new complexity emerges. Agents are starting to address the next layer of that complexity: intent, adaptation, governance, and collaboration.
Excellent book on mathematical thinking in the true sense - what needs to happen in the mind's eye to really grapple with abstract mathematics. Definitely a eye (mind?) opener for someone who has some graduate level math education but couldn't gel with the crazier stuff.
Unspun is cool! I hadn’t heard of it before. They provide 3D weaving on demand, according to the site, which is the “other” clothes manufacturing technique — knitting is how, e.g. a sweater or more finely made t-shirts would be made, and the structure of the ties and loops in knitting provides that ‘stretch’. Weaving on the other hand shouldn’t stretch much, and would be used for, say, your curtains, jeans, or a dress that needs to fit exact sizes.
There are Japanese (and probably other) 3D in the round knitting providers, but I hadn’t heard of weaving done on demand and to spec — that’s pretty amazing.
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